Although this commit also changes the visibility of some test methods
to package-private, the remainder of that task will be addressed in
conjunction with gh-36496.
Closes gh-36495
This commit updates the whole Spring Framework codebase to use JSpecify
annotations instead of Spring null-safety annotations with JSR 305
semantics.
JSpecify provides signficant enhancements such as properly defined
specifications, a canonical dependency with no split-package issue,
better tooling, better Kotlin integration and the capability to specify
generic type, array and varargs element null-safety. Generic type
null-safety is not defined by this commit yet and will be specified
later.
A key difference is that Spring null-safety annotations, following
JSR 305 semantics, apply to fields, parameters and return values,
while JSpecify annotations apply to type usages. That's why this
commit moves nullability annotations closer to the type for fields
and return values.
See gh-28797
This commit makes sure that the programmatic exception that is thrown
by the cache abstraction uses the same message structure as a default
message produced by NoUniqueBeanDefinitionException.
Closes gh-33305
This commit replaces the IllegalStateException thrown in
CacheAspectSupport when a CacheManager cannot be determined. These were
added to provide a dedicated error message, but it is possible to do
so without hiding the more adequate exception type.
Closes gh-22442
Search for : assertThat\((.+)\.equals\((\w+)\)\)\.isTrue\(\)
Replace with : assertThat($1).isEqualTo($2)
Search for : assertThat\((.+)\.equals\((\w+)\)\)\.isFalse\(\)
Replace with : assertThat($1).isNotEqualTo($2)
Closes gh-31763
This commit deprecates the various nullSafeHashCode methods taking array
types as they are superseded by Arrays.hashCode now. This means that
the now only remaining nullSafeHashCode method does not trigger a
warning only if the target type is not an array. At the same time, there
are multiple use of this method on several elements, handling the
accumulation of hash codes.
For that reason, this commit also introduces a nullSafeHash that takes
an array of elements. The only difference between Objects.hash is that
this method handles arrays.
The codebase has been reviewed to use any of those two methods when it
is possible.
Closes gh-29051
This commit refactors some AssertJ assertions into more idiomatic and
readable ones. Using the dedicated assertion instead of a generic one
will produce more meaningful error messages.
For instance, consider collection size:
```
// expected: 5 but was: 2
assertThat(collection.size()).equals(5);
// Expected size: 5 but was: 2 in: [1, 2]
assertThat(collection).hasSize(5);
```
Closes gh-30104
In order to be able to use text blocks and other new Java language
features, we are upgrading to a recent version of Checkstyle.
The latest version of spring-javaformat-checkstyle (0.0.28) is built
against Checkstyle 8.32 which does not include support for language
features such as text blocks. Support for text blocks was added in
Checkstyle 8.36.
In addition, there is a binary compatibility issue between
spring-javaformat-checkstyle 0.0.28 and Checkstyle 8.42. Thus we cannot
use Checkstyle 8.42 or higher.
In this commit, we therefore upgrade to spring-javaformat-checkstyle
0.0.28 and downgrade to Checkstyle 8.41.
This change is being applied to `5.3.x` as well as `main` in order to
benefit from the enhanced checking provided in more recent versions of
Checkstyle.
Closes gh-27481
Prior to this commit, some tests would belong to the PERFORMANCE
`TestGroup`, while they were not testing for performance but rather
performing functional tests that involve long running operations or
timeouts.
This commit moves those tests to the LONG_RUNNING `TestGroup`.
See gh-24830